Eternity's Children

They released a single titled "Workin' Tired" b/w "Gonna Be Nice Tonight" on the local Flash label before relocating to Biloxi, Mississippi in 1966.

Another single, both songs composed by Blackman, titled "Can't Put A Thing Over Me" b/w "Time and Place" was released on another local label called Apollo.

As 1966 turned to 1967, the band recorded a demo after the manager of a club in Baton Rouge named Ray Roy watched one of their live performances.

Under the label's Tower subsidiary the band, with production by Keith Olsen and Curt Boettcher, released their most successful single, "Mrs. Bluebird" b/w "Little Boy".

[1] During work on Eternity's Children's debut studio album, managerial and musical indifference caused Blackman, Bounds, and Walker to exit from band activity.

Only keyboardist Mike "Kid" McClain would be included as a replacement and the remaining members of Ross, Whittaker, and Lawley would continue to record the album.

[2] Wagner, Blackman, and Walker went on to be a part of the band Starbuck, achieving a number three hit in the spring and summer of 1976 with their debut single, "Moonlight Feels Right".

Linda Lawley Pelfrey (born in Stillwater, Oklahoma) died of cancer on November 24, 2007, at age 58, in Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California.